Pouille wraps up 10th Davis Cup title for France
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[November 27, 2017]
By Julien Pretot
LILLE, France (Reuters) - France won
their 10th Davis Cup title when Lucas Pouille crushed Steve Darcis
6-3 6-1 6-0 to give the hosts a 3-2 victory in the final against
neighbours Belgium on Sunday.
Pouille was never threatened in the decisive rubber after David
Goffin had given Belgium both their points with impressive displays
in the singles.
Les Bleus, however, had more strength in depth, winning a singles
match through Jo-Wilfried Tsonga on Friday and Saturday's doubles
with Richard Gasquet and Pierre-Hugues Herbert.
It was their first title since they beat Australia away in 2001
before three defeats in the final - in 2002, 2010 and 2014 - while
Belgium have yet to win the title, having now lost three finals
after defeats in 1904 and 2015.
Yannick Noah, the last Frenchman to win a grand slam title,
celebrated his third Davis Cup success as captain after leading
France to victory in 1991 and 1996.
"It was a victory we had been dreaming off," said Noah. "It's a
united group. It was a tough weekend against a good Belgian team.
Lucas played a fantastic final match."
Belgium captain Johan Van Herck added: "I would not change anything.
We have regrets about losing, it's normal that we are disappointed
after a tough weekend. In sports it's never nice to be second".
STRAIGHT SETS
Goffin gave the visitors a 1-0 lead by beating Pouille in the
opening singles before Tsonga levelled by defeating Darcis on
Friday, the number ones both prevailing in straight sets.
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France's Lucas Pouille celebrates winning the Davis Cup and his
match against Belgium's Steve Darcis REUTERS/Yves Herman
France took the lead thanks to the pairing of Gasquet and Herbert,
who had never played a competitive match together but beat Ruben
Bemelmans and Joris De Loore in four sets.
Goffin was again a notch above the rest on Sunday, levelling the tie
at 2-2 against Tsonga with a 7-6(5) 6-3 6-2 win as the world number
seven sent the tie into a decider.
The final match was anti-climactic as Pouille went for the throat,
racing to a 3-0 lead against Darcis, who never seemed to stand a
chance on the indoor hardcourt even if he had won all of his five
matches in the competition before.
World number 18 Pouille, who was born 75 km from Lille, held serve
to take the first set and never looked back, claiming 12 games in a
row and closing it out on the first match point when a sorry Darcis
sent a shot long.
"There's nothing more beautiful than winning as a team in front of
my friends and family. Now we're going to celebrate and enjoy it,"
said Pouille.
(Reporting by Julien Pretot; Editing by Clare Fallon and Ken Ferris)
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